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Taliban vow
to kidnap, kill more foreigners
KABUL—Afghanistan’s Taliban plan to abduct and kill more nationals from
foreign countries whose troops serve under NATO and the U.S. military in
the country, a spokesman for the Islamic movement warned on Monday.
The vow comes just days after the Taliban released 19 South Korean
hostages after their government struck a deal that critics said sets a
dangerous precedent that could spur more kidnappings and make life even
more dangerous for foreigners.
“We consider it (kidnapping) as an arm that can help us in imparting a
blow to the enemy,” Taliban spokesman Qari Mohammad Yousuf told Reuters
by telephone from an undisclosed location. “Kidnapping ... and killing
of (nationals) of those countries who have come for the annihilation of
the nation of Afghanistan, are works which suppress the enemy,” he
added.
Yousuf, one of two Taliban spokesmen, said the group would not target
nationals from foreign countries who have no troops in Afghanistan.
Under the deal agreed last week, South Korea said it would pull its
civilian nationals from Afghanistan by the end of August and withdraw
its 200 troops working as doctors and engineers by the end of the year.
The troop pull-out was already planned.
The Taliban, for its part, dropped its central demand for the release of
jailed insurgents. A senior Taliban commander said on condition of
anonymity at the weekend that the deal also included a ransom payment of
more than $20 million, which would be used to buy weapons and fund
suicide attacks.
The commander’s comments followed widespread rumors of a ransom in
Afghanistan and South Korea. Afghan officials had said the deal was
reached in a series of face-to-face negotiations after the group had
already killed two men among the 23-member group of mostly female
missionaries. A foreign diplomat said the Taliban side started the
negotiations with a demand for $20 million.
Both the South Korean government and Taliban spokesman Yousuf deny a
ransom was paid but when asked about the idea earlier in the week, a
spokesman for South Korea’s president did not answer directly, saying
only that the government had done what was necessary.
Since their ouster in 2001, the Taliban have kidnapped a host of
foreigners and Afghans as part of their campaign against the Afghan
government and the nearly 50,000 troops led by NATO and the U.S.
military. The group has killed some, but freed others. It is still
holding one German aid worker kidnapped last month along with another
German and five of their colleagues.
One German was found dead with gunshot wounds and the Taliban demand
Berlin withdraw its troops serving to secure the release of the other.
Germany has ruled out the Taliban demand. The kidnapping of the Koreans
has been the largest mass-abduction in the Taliban campaign so far.
The Taliban are largely active in southern and eastern areas of
Afghanistan and are locked in near daily clashes with Afghan and foreign
troops, in which around 7,000 people have died in the past 19 months —
the bloodiest period since the resurgent Taliban’s fall.
The Local Taliban Commander, Baitullah Masood has put forward four
conditions for the release of abducted security officials.
Senator Saleh Shah while talking to the Private TV channel said that he
is the member of 45-member Jirga, which was formed by the government to
hold talks with Taliban Commander Baitullah Masood has asked the Jirga’s
elders that earlier release of 19 security officials was managed without
the Jirga intervention or condition.—Agencies
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